Last modified: 2002-08-09 by jarig bakker
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Flag used by boers in the Battle of Paardeberg (Boer War)
Jaume Ollé, 22 September 1997
According to my 'Allers Illustrerede Konversations-Leksikon',
the battle began on 17 and ended on 27 February 1900, when the Boer general
Cronje with 3700 soldiers surrendered to the British general Roberts.
Ole Andersen and T.F.Mills, 1 Nov 1999
Can anyone tell me more about this battle? Did the carrying of colours
contribute to the defeat, or was this just the final straw that made the
army prohibit risking the regiments' most prized (but tactically useless)
possessions?
Dean Tiegs, 22 Jan 1998
Someone else earlier on posted that in 1859 the British colors were
made smaller and not carried to the front as before in battle. At Isandlwhana,
the British were encamped in an unlaagered formation. The colors, as near
as I can place them were near Col. Pulleine's HQ at the start. Pulleine
gave the colors to Lt. Melville. The colors were swept away - and I have
heard they were recovered some time later.
Greg Biggs, 23 Jan 1998
The Zulu War of 1879 forced the British Army to reconsider carrying Colours in battle. When the Zululand invasion force was annihilated at Isandhlwana on 22 Jan. 1879, two officers of the 24th Foot fled the battlefield with the Queen's Colour. Zulus pursued them and killed them in the Buffalo River where they lost the Colour in the river current. A search party later found their bodies and the Queen's Colour further downstream. When the regiment returned home in 1880 Q. Victoria asked to see the recovered Colour and placed a wreath of immortelles on the pike. The wreath is carried to this day, and that particular Colour, presented in 1866, was carried until 1934. In August 1880 an MP questioned the propriety of carrying Colours on the battlefield and recommended discontinuing "such impedimenta". The Secretary of War polled generals and colonels on the matter in July 1881. Finally in January 1882 the Army issued an order that "in consequence of the altered formation of attack and the extended range of fire, Regimental Colours shall not in future be taken with the battalions on active service." But at the same time they decided to retain Colours for ceremonial purposes, "affording a record of the services of the regiment and furnishing to the young soldier a history of its gallant deeds." This order extended to the Dominions and Colonies.
While the debate was in progress, the 58th Northamptonhire Regiment
carried their Colours into action at the battle of Laings Nek during the
1st Anglo-Boer War (28 Jan. 1881). The Colours provided a conspicuous target
for the Boer snipers, and Lt. Baillie carrying the Regimental Colour was
repeatedly wounded before being killed. This was the last time British
Colours were carried in battle.
T. F. Mills, 20 March 1997
The Queen's Colour which was carried off the field at Isandhlwana was
cased. Nobody had an opportunity to uncase the Colours during the battle.
All the British (600) and over 2000 Zulus were killed at Isandhlwana. The
Colours played no role at the battle (i.e. nobody was killed because they
were a conspicuous target), but the press attention to the heroics of Lts.
Melvill and Coghill who attempted to save the Queen's Colour, and the Queen's
desire to see it afterwards are what raised the debate about the propriety
of carrying Colours in modern warfare.
T. F. Mills, 23 Jan 1998
In the Aug 2000 National Geographic Magazine is a flag showed in a photo,
where British are fighting agaist the Zulus. There are other Zulu flags?
What are they?
Juan Manuel Gabino Villascan, 27 Jul 2000
It is the Victorian fantasy painting by C.E. Fripp of the annihilation
of the British force at Isandhlwana on 22 Jan. 1879. The flag, for
what it's worth and what you can see of it, is an accurate representation
of the Regimental Colour of the 2nd Battalion, 24th Regiment of Foot.
The problem is, the Colour was not there.
T.F. Mills, 27 Jul 2000
In some ways it is, for flags prior to that time and back to the ancient
Chinese were for command and control purposes in battle. Since the Zulus
had no flag, if the commander of their corps wanted to exert command and
control over a particular unit he would have to know their shield facings
to do so.
Greg Biggs, 23 Jan 1998
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